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Ask for all the history books that record the history before the Han Dynasty.
Shangshu is the earliest history book in China, including Yu, Xia, Shang and Zhou. From Tang Yao at the end of primitive society to Qin Mugong in the Spring and Autumn Period. Most of them are the orders of the emperor, and a few are the words that the monarch and the minister tell each other. Generally speaking, it is called "Patent" in peacetime and "oath" in wartime. What the monarch tells his ministers is called "fate" and what the ministers tell their ministers is called "Hume".

Zuo Zhuan, also known as Zuo Zhuan in the Spring and Autumn Period or Zuo Chunqiu, consists of thirty volumes. The style of Zuo Zhuan is a chronicle, and its contents are mostly biographies of historical events, describing the process of important historical events in Spring and Autumn Annals. It started in the year of Lu Yin (722 BC) and ended in Lu Daogong for four years (464 BC), which is 17 years more than Chunqiu. Zuo Zhuan supplemented and enriched the content of Spring and Autumn Annals, which not only recorded the historical facts of Lu, but also recorded the history of other countries. Not only remember political events, but also widely involve "small things" in various fields of society; First, change the chronological method of Chunqiu and replace it with a systematic and organized historical compilation method; Not only did I remember the historical facts of the Spring and Autumn Period, but I also introduced many ancient historical facts.

Guoyu is a 2 1 narrative of national history, which was roughly written during the Warring States and Chu Dynasties and is said to have been written by Zuo Qiuming. Also known as Chunqiu Zhuan, it is listed as Chunqiu Zhuan together with Zuozhuan. The two books have both external and internal references. Guoyu is a collection of historical works. The records of historical events in the eight countries in the Spring and Autumn Period are slightly different, and the writing methods are also quite different. This is not written by one person. It may have been recorded by historians of various countries at that time, and then it was sorted and polished, and finally finalized by Liu Xiang of the Western Han Dynasty. Guoyu is classified by countries, and its historical events are divided into chapters. It has a history of about 500 years, from the Western Zhou Dynasty to the Han, Zhao and Wei Dynasties. It mainly recites words and notes, reflects historical events through speeches and debates of the upper ruling class, and explores the root causes of rise and fall. The combination of history and theory is the progress of historical thinking, and its narrative involves remote areas.

The Warring States Policy is a compilation of lobbyists' strategies and speeches during the Warring States Period. At the beginning, there were names and books such as national policies, state affairs, stories, short and long books, and revised books. At the end of the Western Han Dynasty, Liu Xiang compiled 33 articles. There was a vacancy in the Song Dynasty, which was supplemented by Ceng Gong. The silk book of the Western Han Dynasty unearthed in Mawangdui, Changsha, Hunan Province, describes the current affairs of the Warring States Period and is called Letters of the Warring States Period, which is similar to this book. The Warring States Policy is a famous historical work in ancient China. This is a national history book. The book is written in different countries such as Eastern Zhou Dynasty, Western Zhou Dynasty, Qin State, Qi State, Chu State, Zhao State, Wei State, South Korea, Yan State, Song State, Wei State and Zhongshan State, with a total of 33 volumes and about 6,543,800 words. The Warring States Policy mainly describes the political opinions and strategies of strategists during the Warring States period, and shows the historical characteristics and social features of the Warring States period. This is an important book for studying the history of the Warring States.

Biography of the Ram, also known as Biography of the Spring and Autumn Ram and Spring and Autumn Ram, is one of the Confucian classics. It started in the year of Luyin and ended in the 14th year of Lu Aigong, which is the same as the beginning and ending time of Chunqiu. According to legend, its author was a disciple of Xia Zi. During the Warring States Period, Qi people were taller than rams. The main spirit of Biography of the Ram is to publicize the aspects of bringing order out of chaos, putting righteousness above family ties and ruthlessly suppressing traitors and thieves in Confucianism, so as to serve for strengthening centralization and "unification".

Biography of Gu Liang, also known as Biography of Gu Liang in Spring and Autumn Period and Biography of Gu Liang in Spring and Autumn Period, is one of the Confucian classics. It started in Luyin and ended in Lu Aigong 14. This type is similar to the biography of ram. According to legend, its author is a disciple of Lu, Gu Liangchi in the Warring States Period. Gu Liang Zhuan emphasized the other side of Confucianism: attaching importance to ceremony, righteousness, education and loyalty, which was conducive to easing the internal contradictions of the ruling group and stabilizing the long-term interests of feudal rule, and thus was highly valued by the ruling class.

Historical Records (130), written by Sima Qian in Han Dynasty, Zuo Fengyi was born in Xiayang. Born in the fifth year of Emperor Jing of Han Dynasty, he died in the third year of Emperor Zheng of Han Dynasty. In the first year of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, Sima Qian began to write historical records. In about two years, the compilation was basically completed. Historical Records is a general history that runs through ancient and modern times. It describes the history of China for about 3,000 years from the legendary Huangdi to the first year of Emperor Wudi's yuanshou. Biography 12, table 10, 8 books, 30 aristocratic families and 70 biographies, totaling 130.

Han Shu (volume 100), born in Jianwu, Guangwu Emperor of the Eastern Han Dynasty, was a Han Chinese. My father Ban Biao is a historian. He wrote 65 biographies to supplement the historical records. Hanshu was completed on the basis of Houzhuan. In the first year of Yongyuan, Ban Gu followed the general Dou Xian to crusade against Xiongnu and participated in the proceedings. Later, because of some things in prison, Yongyuan died in prison for four years. At that time, there were still eight tables in Hanshu and Tianzhi. Emperor Gaozu called Ban Zhao, the sister of Ban Gu, as a supplement, and Ma Xu assisted Ban Zhao in writing Tianzhi. Ban Zhao is a unique female writer in Twenty-four History. Hanshu includes biographies 12, tables 8, records 10 and biographies 70, with a total of 100, which was divided into 120 volumes by later generations. Its chronicle began in the first year of Liu Bang, Emperor Gaozu of Han Dynasty, and ended in the fourth year of Emperor Wang Mang.

Compared with historical records, the style of Hanshu has changed. Shiji is a general history, and Hanshu is a dynastic history. "Hanshu" is called "Historical Records", which is a biography of the province, a biography of the province, a book record, and a family of Han Dynasty. These changes were inherited by some later history books.

The Book of the Later Han Dynasty (120) was written by Ye Fan (398-445), whose name was Zong Wei, who was born in Yang Shun (now Xichuan, Henan) in the Southern Dynasties. The Book of the Later Han Dynasty describes the historical rise and fall of the Eastern Han Dynasty in an orderly way, and describes the society, people's feelings and people in the Eastern Han Dynasty in a patchwork way. Liu Zhiji praised the Book of the Later Han Dynasty as "concise and Zhou, sparse but not leaking" (Shi Tong Bu Zhu), while Wang Yinglin said, "How many people can there be through the ages?" (Quoted from Wang Xianqian's Notes on the Later Han Dynasty) fully affirmed his achievements in this respect.

Sixty-five volumes of The Three Kingdoms, written by Chen Shou, was born in the 11th year of Jianxing in Liu Chan after the Han Dynasty and died in the 7th year of Yuan Kang, Emperor Jinhui. He works as an official in Han Shu. At the age of 30, the Han Shu regime perished. After entering Jin, he was an official. Before Chen Shou wrote The History of the Three Kingdoms, there were some historical books about Wei and Wu, such as Shu Wei, Wei Lue by Yu Huan and Wu Shu. Shu Wei and Wu Shu in The Romance of the Three Kingdoms are mainly written according to these historical books. The regime of Shu did not set up historians, and there was no special person responsible for collecting materials and compiling the history of Shu. Shu Shu's materials were collected and edited by Chen Shou. Chen Shou's writing time is close to the Three Kingdoms, and there are not many achievements for others to learn from. In addition, as a private writer, he has no access to a large number of documents and archives. When we read the History of the Three Kingdoms, we will find that Chen Shou has the difficulty of lacking historical materials and the content is not sufficient. Chen Shou didn't keep a diary. If you want to understand the system of laws and regulations in the Three Kingdoms period, you have to turn to the Book of Jin. There are 65 volumes of The Three Kingdoms, including 30 volumes of Shu Wei, 0/5 volumes of Shu Shu/Kloc, and 20 volumes of Wu Shu, which mainly records the history of Wei, Shu and Wu.

Yuejueshu is an important book that records the history of China's early wuyue. It recorded the historical facts of wuyue's hegemony from the end of the Spring and Autumn Period to the early Warring States Period, going back to Yu Xia and down to the Han Dynasty, covering the politics, economy, military, astronomy, geography, calendar, language and other aspects of wuyue in this historical period. Some of them are not found in other existing books and documents, but they are introduced in detail in this book; Some accounts can be fabricated and verified with other ancient books, so scholars attach importance to them.

Wu Yue Chun Qiu was written by Zhao Ye in the Eastern Han Dynasty. The official who compiled Sikuquanshu in the Qing Dynasty wrote a summary, saying that "although the description is a bit diffuse, the words are quite rich, such as the day when Wu Shang occupied Jiazi ... it was too much to pay attention to". However, because there are many historical materials in the book, it is regarded as a book of history department by later generations, not just an official novel.